Preview 2010: The Reading

I just updated my Twitter background image to this years shelf. In other words from one pile (list)
to a new pile.

Sir Richard Branson – Business Stripped Bare (Kindle for iPhone)

David Foster Wallace – Infinite Jest

Paul Auster – Invisible

PLI/Abby Marks Beale – 10 Days to faster Reading

David Baldacci – Simple Genius

Paul Auster – Oracle Night

Dan Ariely – Predictably Irrational

Wallace Stegner – Crossing to Safety

Halberstam – The Best and the Brightest

Tara Hunt – The Whuffie Factor

Jasper Fforde – Eyre Affair

Georg Franck – Die Ökonomie der Aufmerksamkeit

Thomas Klupp – Paradiso

Nick Hornby – Juliet Naked

W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne – Blue Ocean Strategy

Siri Hustvest – Enchantment of Lily Dahl

Chris Brogan/Julien Smith – Trust Agents

Peter Carey – My life as a fake

Mark Twain – The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Amoz Oz – A Tale of Love and Darkness

Peter Drucker – The Practice of Management

Jack Falla – Home Ice

Dan Tapscott – Wikinomics

Sten Nadolny – Discovery of Slowliness

Minette Walters – The Breaker

Ken Follett – Pillars of the Earth

O’Reilly – Your Brain: The Missing Manual

Charles Frazier – Thirteen Moons

Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird

Hanif Kureishi – The Buddha of Suburbia

Jonathan Safran Foer – Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

John Douglas – Inside the Mind of BTK

It’s a bit different from last year though since quite a lot of books are of the “I really should”-category as a result of simple space issues. You see, Where last years shelf was now is this:
The kids needed more room. Hence I went for “better safe than sorry”. I predict that as last year, 10 books not yet on the list will get read, the new Jack Reacher paperback comes to mind or C.C. Chapman‘s book once it’s published. In addition, I am really curious to see how much reading on the iPhone increases not reading speed per se, but reading productivity.